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Exact(5)
Then he tells three stories.
He tells three disturbing tales.
"It might not be what you want to do, but it's what I want you to do, so make your body do it," he tells three young men attempting and not succeeding to perform a unison phrase.
In it, he tells three stories: the first about his return to Iceland from Copenhagen after years abroad; the second about a visit to the Setes Valley, in Norway; and the third about a sea journey in the late nineteen-forties from Copenhagen to the Mediterranean.
Taking neuroscience as his theme, he tells three interconnected stories – that of Thomas Stoltz Harvey, the pathologist who, in 1955, stole Albert Einstein's brain for private study; Henry, a patient undergoing pioneering brain surgery in Bath in 1953; and Martha, a neuropsychologist in contemporary London attempting to make sense of her present and her past.
Similar(55)
He tells one version of such a story.
Even when he doesn't have a story, he tells one.
"You look like your own winding sheet/Held up by two clothespins" he tells one lover.
His plan, he tells one group, is not to end anything.
"I'm from wherever you want me to be from," he tells one trick.
"He tells ninety-nine lies and maybe the one hundredth is the truth, but you don't know," Fisher says.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com